How to Break Up a Dog Fight and How to Prevent Them

 

Pit bulls are a loyal and loving breed of dog with countless good qualities. And as a proud owner of this wonderful breed, it’s your responsibility to keep your dog—and other dogs in the area—safe and happy.

In order to do that, it’s important to take the proper steps to prevent dog fights.

In the right circumstances, all dogs will fight. But pit bulls fights can be more frequent and more severe if you don’t know how to prevent them.

A dog fight might sound scary, but the truth is that you can easily prevent them by making a few smart decisions. And if a fight does break out, you can break it up quickly as long as you know what to expect and how to react.

A Few Things You Need to Understand About Pit Bulls

  • Pit bulls were bred for fighting. This doesn’t make them mean, bad, or evil; it’s just their heritage (similar to how many other dogs are bred for hunting).
  • Other dog breeds will act out submission signals when they want to stop fighting, which usually signals the end of the fight. But pit bulls may ignore these signals, which means that a pit bull fight can lead to serious damage—or worse—if the fight is not broken up.
  • Pit bulls are “people” dogs. They love spending time with people and enjoy attention and love from your family. They do not need another dog around to be happy.

What Causes Dogs to Fight?

  • Dog fights can happen suddenly and without warning. Fights may be preceded by growling, barking, or posturing, but they may not be. Fights can even occur between dogs that have been close friends for years. And once two dogs have fought before, they are more likely to fight again in the future.
  • Fights can be triggered by seemingly innocent causes, such as excitement and stimulation from seeing a squirrel or other small animal run by. Fights can also escalate from rough-housing, competing over a toy, or even out of jealousy (for example, if one dog is getting more attention from the family).
  • Sexual hormones can cause dogs to behave much more aggressively than normal.
  • Finally, tension between dogs can cause them to fight. And one sure source of tension is an unclear pecking order. If you have a fighting breed of dog, make sure to train it properly so that it clearly understands its place in the social hierarchy.

How to Prevent Dog Fights

The #1 best way to prevent dog fights in your home is to make the pit bull your only pet. As we mentioned above, pit bulls are “people dogs” who enjoy spending time with your family and do not need another dog to be happy.

If there’s no other dog around, there’s no one for your pit bull to fight with.

If you prefer to have more than one dog, here are 8 tips to minimize any chance of fighting:

  1. Get one male and one female. Same-sex dogs are more likely to fight. Two males (or two females) are much more likely to fight than a male and a female. This is true of every breed, not just pit bulls, because two dogs of the same sex are likely to see each other as rivals.
  2. Release pent-up energy by exercising your dogs. If dogs are not exercised frequently enough, they will build pent-up energy. This can lead to dog fights.
  3. Walk your dogs together. Walking your dogs together forms a stronger pack. Dogs that have formed a strong pack are less likely to fight.
  4. Spay or neuter your pit bulls as early as possible. Sexual hormones cause them to be much more aggressive than usual.
  5. Never leave your pit bull unsupervised with other animals. If you aren’t around to watch them, each pit bull should be crated or kept in a separate room.
  6. Watch your dogs when they are playing. Even innocent rough-housing can escalate into a fight if you aren’t paying attention. Remember, as the human you are the leader of the pack—it’s your job to set limits on the dogs’ behavior.
  7. Pick up dog toys, bones, and food when they’re not being used. Two dogs who stumble across a toy or a bone could start fighting over it.
  8. Always keep your pit bull on a leash when you take them for a walk, and keep them away from other unleashed dogs. This means that you should NEVER bring an adult pit bull to an off-leash dog park.

What If A Fight Does Break Out?

If your dog does start fighting, it’s important not to panic. Screaming and panicking will not stop a fight, it will only intensify it. By staying calming and using the proper tools, you can break up the fight quickly.

How to break up a dog fight, Method 1:

The two things you will need are a break stick (to pry the dog’s mouth open) and a collar or leash (to pull the dogs apart). It's important to keep collars on your dogs at all times. Breaking up a dog fight is more difficult when the dogs are not wearing collars.

A break stick is a stick you insert between the dog’s back teeth. Then, twist the stick to pry the dog’s mouth open.

Once the dog’s mouth is open and the hold is broken, grab their collars or leashes and pull UP. Avoid pulling them apart face to face at ground level, it will only make them fight more intensely. Separate the dogs as quickly as you can—by putting them in separate rooms, or tying one to a tree while you remove the other.

How to break up a dog fight, Method 2:

One of the FASTEST and SAFEST way to break up a dog fight is by grabbing both dogs by their collars and holding them in in the air as high as possible, so the dogs lose oxygen. Without oxygen, they will not be able to hold their grip.

Yes, one dog will usually lose oxygen before the other, but as long as both dog's front feet are off the ground and the collar is applying direct pressure to bottom of neck (as high up on neck as possible) they WILL lose oxygen and release their grip.

Do not hold the dogs in the air ANY longer than necessary — and that is the moment the dog releases its grip.

NEVER scold or hit your dog after a fight. Speak quietly to the dog to sooth it and reduce the arousal level. After the fight is over, it's important that you create peace, harmony, and balance.

The idea of a dog fight might sound scary, but as long as you follow this advice you shouldn’t have anything to worry about. Just be mindful of your dog’s heritage, and you’ll have a loving family member who will be a source of happiness for years to come.

 

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138 comments

Whitney M Stone on May 17, 2023

we are having the same issues. Ours have been separated for the better part of 4 months

Michael Church on May 17, 2023

I have two boys and they only tussle over food and I’ve taken care of that by separating them and walking them together!!!! I love my boys ! On top of tht they’ve been sleeping together.

Melissa Hayes on May 17, 2023

I am a veterinarian who has sewn up the wounds inflicted upon other dogs by pit bulls. But I had the displeasure of breaking up a fight between two pit bulls that had been left under the care of a twelve-year-old girl, their sole source of supervision. These two dogs had lived together for seven years. I heard that poor girl screaming hysterically at the fighting dogs. Fortunately, I had pepper spray available, and I blasted each dog directly in the face, caring little if I caused irritation to the dogs’ eyes and nares. There was no way that I would have been able to stop them from fighting any other way. One dog was badly injured: its scalp and masseter muscle torn from the underlying bone. I telephoned 911, and the police came to file a report and to call the young girl’s mother. When the mother arrived, she yelled at ME for using pepper spray against her dogs, even though it likely saved the life of one of them and kept her daughter from being injured while breaking up a dog fight. Typical pit bull owner.

Ove the course of my nearly twenty years in practice, I have encountered many pit bulls. The vast majority have been easy to handle. But I still don’t trust them. Not with another dog, a cat, and certainly not a child. In the United States, pit bulls comprise less than six percent of the canine population yet make up sixty percent of the dogs relinquished to shelters. Relinquished by a novice owner after the dog growled at the other dog in the house, their child’s playmate, or the child itself. Shelters are overrun by pit bulls, and shelter personnel are burnt out by the number of euthanasia they must perform on these unwanted pit bulls. For these reasons, I believe that the breeding of pit bulls should be banned, until this crisis has been resolved. All dogs have teeth which means all dogs can fight, this is true, but few can do the damage that a pit bull can do. What drives someone to own such a dog?

Melissa Hayes on May 17, 2023

As a veterinarian who has sewn up many victims of pit bulls (some of which have been fellow pit bulls), it is a mystery to me why someone would want to own such a liability. The vast majority of the pit bulls I have met have been nice to me, just not to other dogs. And when a pit bull is being aggressive, it’s being aggressive in a way that a Chihuahua could never be. Pit bulls make up for ~6% of all dogs in the United States, yet they account for more than half of all reported dog bites, and more than sixty percent of shelter admissions. Clearly there is a problem in the breed. I do believe that pit bulls should not be bred. There are enough in shelters to certainly give everyone who wants a pit bull a pit bull.

Christal Prout on May 17, 2023

Cathy, please tell me more about your shake can